K. C. Alexander doesn’t ‘write’ so much as she fires words into your cerebral cortex with an electromagnetic railgun.— Chuck Wendig, NYT Bestselling author of Star Wars: Aftermath and Invasive

Necrotech is a speed freak rush down mean streets of the digital, the modified, and the just plain crazy. It’s like razors for your brain.

— Richard Kadrey, author of the Sandman Slim series

Nanoshock crushes everything in its path. Brutal, unapologetic, sexy cyberpunk, Nanoshock is a steel-fisted punch in the mouth.

— Scott Sigler, #1 bestselling author of the Generations trilogy

Necrotech (SINless #1)

Street thug Riko has some serious issues—memories wiped, reputation tanked, girlfriend turned into a tech-fueled zombie. And the only people who can help are the mercenaries who think she screwed them over...

Nanoshock (SINless #2)

Being a mercenary isn't all it's cracked up to be. Especially when Riko's hard-won reputation has taken a hard dive into fucked. Now she's fair game for every Tom, Dick and Blow looking to score some cred...

I'm asked what writing between the lines means. I explain that I tell stories about the people erased in the middle; the ones that don't fit the labels. I tell them I write about me, too.

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It's impossible to speak for everybody. It took years for K. C. Alexander to understand that—years in which she struggled to find herself and her drive while keeping up with the expectations of those around her. Eventually all that time and all that bottled up frustration converted to a rage that exploded into novel form. Five years after publishing her first book, fifteen years after losing herself entirely, Necrotech leapt savage and bloody from her head, her heart, and her flesh and bones.

She has never looked back.

Coming out bipolar and genderqueer was a turning point for her personally and professionally. Labels pasted on people, concepts, archetypes and activities became her prison. Labels came with expectations—dress and appearance, voice and verbiage, thoughts and feelings.

Ultimately, Alexander chose to dedicate time and story space to her own journey. Sexuality, gender roles and expectations, invisible disability, the freedom of fantasy and the rage of erasure fuel her works, often leaving violent footprints in its wake.

She is a struggling Buddhist. But then, aren't we all?

ATTENTION MEDIA

Jason M. Hough and K. C. Alexander collaborate on this tie-in novel that leads readers right up to the start of the game. Relatively spoiler-free, flexible enough to be read before or after gameplay, Nexus Uprising adds detail and subtle ripples throughout Andromeda's galaxy.